Sunday, December 4, 2016

Pakistan: 5 Muslims sentenced to death for murdering Christian couple

A Pakistani anti-terror court has sentenced five people to death over the killing of a Christian couple who were lynched and burned in a kiln after being falsely accused of blasphemy.

This sentencing represents good news in a country where abusive and easily manipulated blasphemy laws have been long criticized as tools for a witch hunt against Christians. Christians are often set up and falsely accused, sometimes simply for getting into a dispute with a Muslim co-worker or neighbor who decides out of revenge to lie about them blaspheming Islam or Muhammad.

The only Christian in Pakistan’s cabinet, Shahbaz Bhatti, who was openly critical of Pakistan’s blasphemy laws and sought reforms, was murdered by assassins who “left leaflets signed ‘Taliban al-Qaida'”, five years ago. Outspoken Pakistani Governor Salman Taseer was also assassinated by his own guard for efforts to implement reforms in Pakistan.

Recently in Pakistan, 150 Muslim clerics demanded death for Asia Bibi, a Christian woman accused of blasphemy who has been living under brutal conditions in jail since 2009.

“Five sentenced to death in Pakistan for lynching and burning Christian couple in a kiln”, Independent UK, November 23, 2016:

A Pakistani anti-terror court has sentenced five people to death over the killing of a Christian couple who were lynched and burned in a kiln after being falsely accused of blasphemy.

The deaths of Shahzad Masih and Shama Bibi caused outrage in Pakistan and saw other Christian families living near their home in Punjab flee the area in fear.

The illiterate couple had been falsely accused of tossing out pages of the Quran along with the rubbish, desecrating the Muslim holy book.

Blasphemy is legally punishable by death in the deeply conservative Muslim country, where even unproven accusations can stir violence.

Critics say the laws are abused to wage personal vendettas, often against Christians.

Witnesses described how an angry mob of hundreds of people set upon the couple near the town of Kot Radha Kishan in Punjab in 2014, attacking them and then throwing their bodies into a brick kiln.

It is unclear whether they were still alive when tossed into the kiln.

Riaz Anjum, the lawyer representing the couple’s family, said a total of 103 people had been charged in the case. But the court in the eastern city of Lahore had acquitted 90, including the owner of the brick kiln.

He had been accused of locking the couple up as they tried to flee for fear they would default on their debt to him.

Apart from the five sentenced to hang, eight others were given two years’ imprisonment.

“The five people awarded the death sentence were involved in dragging, beating and burning the couple while the other eight played a supportive role according to the judgement,” Anjum said.

Senior prosecutor Khurram Khan confirmed the ruling.

Police have traditionally been reluctant to clamp down on mob violence for fear of enraging Islamists, a fact not lost upon the relatives of the deceased….